Bee Facts
Bee Facts
Some random bee and honey facts you might find interesting
- A bee produces about a teaspoon of honey in her entire lifetime
- Honeybees never sleep
- A bee travels the equivalent of three times around the world to produce one kilo of honey
- Bees can fly up to 25 kilometres per hour and beat their wings 11400 times per minute
- Bees communicate with each other with a “waggle dance” - this gives the other bees information about where nectar can be found
- Bees have five eyes. The two biggest compound eyes are hairy
- Honey bees collect pollen in so-called pollen baskets on the back of their legs. When you next watch a bee that is collecting pollen, look out for the little yellow, orange or white blobs on their back legs
- Bees can see ultraviolet light but they cannot see the colour red.
- Bees have two stomachs – one ordinary one and one to transport the nectar
- Bees have an enormous sense of smell – they have even been trained to smell explosives
- A good queen bee can lay at least 2000 eggs per day
- A bee will visit 50 to 100 flowers per flight when collecting nectar
- Fossils of honey bees date back about 150 million years
- Cave paintings in Spain from 7000BC show the earliest records of beekeeping
- Honey was found in the tomb of Tutankhamun in ancient Egypt – it was still edible
- The first “domesticated” beehive likely traces back to the Egyptians. The earliest apiarists made hives from old logs or tree trunks to mimic the homes of wild swarms.
- Honey bees were introduced to New Zealand in 1839 by Mary Brumby, the sister of an English missionary